Nutritional requirements of ticks.
Abstrakt
Ticks acquire nutrients only by a parasitic nature of feeding on animals, including
humans. During this process, a wide array of pathogens is transmitted. Ticks of the Ixodidae
family receive exactly one blood meal in each active developmental. Knowing the trophic
dependence of tick metabolism on the host blood meal components may enable discovering
processes essential for the tick physiology and development. Exploiting a membrane system of
tick feeding and whole blood fractionation, we have revealed that adult ticks need to acquire
host haemoglobin-derived haem so that they can produce viable larvae, and reproduce. Haem is
not further catabolised in ticks, and iron is thus acquired via independent route with the host
serum transferrin as a source molecule. Using RNA-seq, we compared transcriptome
compositions between guts of blood- and serum-fed ticks. We identified fifteen gut transcripts
that change their levels with respect to the presence/absence of dietary red blood cells.
Glutathione S-transferase, one of the identified encoded molecules, shows a clear haeminresponsive
expression at both transcript and protein levels. Its apparent haem-binding
properties suggest that this protein is directly involved in haem homeostasis maintenance
within the tick gut. The ultimate goal of such research is to identify and verify targets that, when
blocked, would render the acquisition and/or distribution system of haem in ticks nonfunctional.
This would represent a novel way of anti-tick interventions in veterinary and human
medicine.